NewsCentre

Showing 31 to 40 of 45 results
A study by CityU's Centre for Communication Research shows that local Internet users receive on average 58 junk mails per week, 11 more than that of 2004 and double the number of normal emails received.
Department of Management Sciences announced the findings of the "CityU Hong Kong Consumer Satisfaction Index 2005" on 7 January, showing that HKCSI stayed at 69.5, up 0.6% from the previous record high in 2004.
An International Conference on Mobile Communication and Asian Modernities was held on 7-8 June, bringing together local and international scholars to exchange views on issues related to mobile communication and social development.
The Department of Management Sciences announced its findings of the “CityU Hong Kong Consumer Satisfaction Index (CityU-HKCSI) 2004”. The findings show that the overall satisfaction level of local consumers in 2004 reached a record high level.
As part of an ongoing Research Seminar Series, on 11 October 2004, Dr Betty Lee, of CityU's Department of English and Communication, shared her research findings on: "Hong Kong Consumers' Evaluation Process of Organizational Crisis".
For the international and local scholars who gathered in the Multi-media Room for the Law and Language in International Arbitration Conference (LLIA) 2-4 October, the letter of the law was shown to be ambiguous, if not downright perplexing.
City University of Hong Kong researchers who compile the Hong Kong Consumer Satisfaction Index (HKCSI) reported the overall satisfaction level of local consumers dropped to a record low last year. They also identified a correlation between unemployment and the satisfaction index-the higher the unemployment, the lower the index. The HKCSI 2002 was released on 11 February.
Hong Kong consumers were less happy this year, with the Hong Kong Consumer Satisfaction Index shrinking to 66 in 2001, a 2.2 % drop over last year, CityU's Department of Management Sciences announced this week.
City University of Hong Kong advocates applied research and emphasizes the transfer of knowledge and technology to industry and commerce because of their benefit to the community. To encourage applied research and to recognize those who excel in this area, City University has run the Applied Research Excellence Awards Competition since 1995.
If a group of management sciences professors at City University have their way, the Centa-City Index, a winner of CityU's prestigious Applied Research Excellence Awards in 2001, may become as widely accepted and creditable as the Hang Seng Index in measuring the territory's economic health.

Contact Information

Communications and Institutional Research Office

Back to top